See Your Own Giant Head Floating Above Tokyo’s Skies? Art Project “Masayume” Soliciting Participants
- Source:
- © PR Times, Inc. / © mé
- Tags:
- Art / Masayume / mé / modern art / Projection / Tokyo 2020 / Tokyo Arts Council / Tokyo Metropolitan Government / Tokyo Olympics / Tokyo Tokyo Festival
Related Article
-
Tokyo 2020 Olympics Welcomes Akira Comparisons With Projection Mapping Event
-
Artist’s Ghibli-Inspired Prints Bring New Perspective To Famous Movie Scenes
-
Alice In Wonderland Re-imagined With Japanese Artwork: Gorgeous Watercolor
-
Famous Manga Artists, Illustrators Support West Japan Flood Victims With Their Art
-
Scenes From Pokémon Merge With Traditional Art In Stunning Woodblock Prints
-
The Yayoi Kusama robot that wowed Paris, New York & London is now in Tokyo at Louis Vuitton in Shibuya Ward
The Tokyo Tokyo Festival, an initiative led by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government and Arts Council Tokyo to drum up excitement in the run-up to the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games, recently announced the 13 projects which had been chosen among 2,436 proposals submitted from within Japan and overseas.
Art Project "Masayume"
One of the 13 projects already garnering attention is まさゆめ "Masayume," by the Japanese modern art collective [mé] (written in Japanese as 目, meaning "eye").
Inspired by a dream [mé] artist Haruka Kojin had in her childhood of a person's face floating above the city like the moon, Masayume ultimately aims to send a living person's face aloft above the skies of Tokyo in the summer of 2020.
The lucky face will be chosen by the collective between March 26th and June 2019. In Tokyo, they will hold several workshops to solicit participants. The general public can also participate through the project's website, regardless of gender, age or nationality.
According to the press release, [mé] hopes that "witnessing the formidable sight of a giant human head floating above the skies of Tokyo on the occasion of the world's largest event" will provide an opportunity for us as human beings to "reconsider the simultaneously individual and public nature of our lives."
How to participate
© PR Times, Inc.
Step 1: take four photos of yourself from the waist up, one facing forward, two profiles (one for each side), and finally, a photo of the back of your head. The photos should be taken against a light, single-color background, with your face clearly visible and the photo not overly edited.
Step 2: Then, access the entry form page here.
Step 3: Input the required information (name, address, telephone number), upload your four photos (100 MB max each), and submit the form.
Masayume project flow
© PR Times, Inc.
Japanese art collective [mé]
Mé is a Japanese art collective/team project comprising three core members, artist Haruka Kojin, director Kenji Minamigawa, and production manager Hirofumi Masui. According to their website, they work on "the realization of artworks that manipulate perceptions of the physical world," through installations which "provoke awareness of the inherent unreliability and uncertainty in the world around us."